Book,  chapter

 1    1,    2|        and the lives of several human beings depend on our sagacity.
 2    1,   11|         flying from the falcon. Human beings there were none,
 3    1,   14|     beyond the utmost limits of human sight, and its powers of
 4    1,   14|     rose on all sides. It was a human body the condor had in his
 5    1,   14|         of joy never broke from human lips, than Glenarvan uttered
 6    1,   19|      had scented a good meal of human flesh or horse flesh, and
 7    1,   19|      and speaking to him, as if human blood flowed in the veins
 8    1,   22|        nature so far beyond all human power. Their salvation did
 9    1,   24|         When he has once tasted human flesh he scents it greedily.
10    1,   24| proclaimed himself chief of the human race; but Mr. Jaguar is
11    2,    1|        Paganel; “but it is only human to make a mistake, while
12    2,    3|  excellence for the exercise of human energies, and the ship is
13    2,    3|        all his world. The whole human race is shut up in himself,
14    2,    4|      low enough in the scale of human intelligence, and most degraded
15    2,   10|        with the loud tones of a human voice, in the shape of cries,
16    2,   13|    complain of it any more than human beings. The order of the
17    2,   17|   untroubled by the presence of human beings.~“You have neither
18    2,   18|     perceived among the scrub a human form dragging itself along
19    3,    1|      the said bear has dealt in human flesh in his time.”~“What
20    3,    1|    Zealand; but still— you know human nature. All we want to nourish
21    3,    3|       race, cannibals greedy of human flesh, man-eaters to whom
22    3,    5|         savages began by eating human flesh to appease the demands
23    3,    5|         they will eat meat, and human flesh as meat.”~“Why not
24    3,    5|       Maories have always eaten human flesh. There are even ‘man-eating
25    3,    5|         a savage who has tasted human flesh, is not easily persuaded
26    3,    5|        to God’s laws, of eating human flesh! ‘And beside,’ said
27    3,   11|       natives. They had nothing human left. It seemed possible
28    3,   18|        a feeling of duty toward human justice compelled him to
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